Select Page

State Wildlife Management

Who Is The Anti-Wolf Lobby?

Who Is The Anti-Wolf Lobby?

Journalists in Utah have revealed that an anti-wolf lobby group fraudulently misused public tax dollars to fund its activities, highlighting the entrenched power and corruption of the anti-carnivore lobbyists within state wildlife management.

Hunters Need Predators

Hunters Need Predators

Recent research on ungulate diseases like CWD calls into question the wisdom of states’ permissive, in some cases unrestricted, hunting and trapping of cougars, wolves, coyotes and bobcats. If the whole of nature is good, no part can be bad. It’s time for all hunters to recognize predators as allies, not competitors.

Wild Ground is Common Ground

Wild Ground is Common Ground

In a recent op-ed, Will Marlier pushes back against the narrative often repeated in the wildlife management community that interest in hunting is waning because young/urban people are disconnected from nature and too immersed in their screens.

Are Butterflies Wildlife? Depends Where You Live

Are Butterflies Wildlife? Depends Where You Live

By Catrin Einhorn

“‘State agencies are really at the forefront of conservation for wildlife,’ said Scott Black, executive director of the Xerces Society, a nonprofit group that advocates for insect conservation. ‘But in these states where they can’t work on insects, or in some cases any invertebrates, they don’t. So, you see things just languish.'”

Read more here

Wildlife management in New Mexico needs modernizing

Wildlife management in New Mexico needs modernizing

By Bryan Bird & Kevin Bixby

“The time for the [New Mexico Department of Game and Fish] to pivot from being a relic of the past to a modern, wildlife conservation agency is long overdue. With the number of species moving toward extinction growing daily, the need is urgent. The Legislature needs to pass modernization and commission reform legislation while also approving license fee increases. It can do that with HB 184 and HB 486.”

Read more here

Bills aim to overhaul New Mexico Game and Fish management

Bills aim to overhaul New Mexico Game and Fish management

By Nathan Brown

Two bills focused on reforming wildlife management were recently heard before a New Mexico House Committee. HB 183 would have abolished the state’s Game and Fish Department, while HB 184 would change the way that seats are allocated on the State Wildlife Commission. HB 183 was defeated, but HB 184 made it out of the Energy, Environment and Natural Resources Committee on a 6-3 vote.

Read more here